Versions of this piece appeared in other publications such as the
Sacramento Bee, Charlotte News and Observer, Miami Herald, Roll
Call, The Hill and Common
Dreams.
Creating an Open Electoral
Process
By John B. Anderson
February 29, 2004
Ralph Nader's announcement of his
independent candidacy brings back memories. In 1980, I ran for
president as an independent after abandoning the Republican primaries. Even though polling near 25
percent when declaring my candidacy, I was labeled a spoiler. My
candidacy was said to deprive voters of the clear choice between
incumbent Jimmy Carter and his Republican challenger Ronald
Reagan. Never mind that my platform clearly attracted many people
uncomfortable with this choice.
Ever since then I have
grappled with how we can structure our electoral system to
accommodate an increase in choices and the better dialogue and
greater voter participation coming with those choices. Having an
election between two candidates is obviously better than a one-party
dictatorship, but having an election among more than two candidates
is better than a two-party duopoly.
The American people know this. When Ross Perot
ran for president in 1992, viewership of the presidential debates
soared, and voter turnout rose sharply in nearly every state. When
he was shut out of the 1996 debates,
polls showed that Americans wanted him in the debates by a
margin of three to one. In 2000, a majority of Americans wanted
to include the Green Party's Nader and Reform Party candidate Pat
Buchanan in the debates.
But there is a fundamental, if
easily correctable, problem with our electoral process. We use a
plurality voting system where voting for your favorite candidate can
contribute directly to the election of your least
favorite.
Unlike most democracies, our states have set up
presidential elections so that the candidate with the most votes
wins all electoral votes, even if opposed by a majority of voters.
That makes third-party or independent candidates "spoilers" if they
split a major party candidate's vote. It's this concern that drives
the major parties to exclude other voices from the debates, and for
the current condemnation of Ralph Nader for entering the
presidential race.
Fortunately, there's a solution, one already
practiced for top offices in London, Ireland and Australia and in
Utah and California for key elections: instant runoff voting. Any
state could adopt this simple reform immediately for
all federal elections, including the presidential race. There has
been legislation backing instant runoff voting in nearly two dozen
states, and former presidential candidates Howard Dean and John
McCain advocate the system.
In instant runoff voting, people
vote for their favorite candidate, but also can indicate subsequent
choices by ranking their preferences as 1, 2, 3. If a candidate
receives a majority of first choices, that candidate wins. If not,
the candidate with the fewest votes is eliminated, and a second
round of counting occurs. In this round, your ballot counts for your
top-ranked candidate still in the race. Rounds of counting continue
until there is a majority winner.
With instant runoff voting,
we would determine a true majority winner in
one election and
banish the spoiler concept. Voters would not have to calculate
possible perverse consequences of voting for their favorite
candidate. They could vote their hopes, not their
fears.
Under this system, progressives who like Nader but
worry about George Bush could rank Nader first and the Democrat
second. Similarly, libertarian-minded conservatives upset with the
Republican party's positions on government spending could rank the
Libertarian nominee first and Bush second. Rather than contributing
to a major party candidates' defeat, these candidates instead could
stimulate debate and mobilize new voters.
Our
primitive voting system is this year's biggest spoiler. Instant
runoff voting would give us a more participatory, vital democracy,
where candidates could be judged on their merits and the will of
the majority would more certainly
prevail.
[John B. Anderson
served in Congress from 1961 to 1981 and was an independent
presidential candidate in 1980. He is president of the Center for Voting and Democracy
(www.fairvote.org) and can be contacted at: PO Box 60037,
Washington, DC 20039.]